The Oklahoman

Tears and raw fury: Hearing makes for must-see television

- BY DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — The nation’s political divide and the burgeoning #MeToo movement played out in a riveting daytime drama Thursday before millions of Americans watching the Senate Judiciary Committee’s hearing on Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.

Anger, tears, sex, power — it was all on display.

California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford, acknowledg­ing she was “terrified” to be on stage, told of being sexually assaulted by Kavanaugh at a high school party. Hours later, Kavanaugh, getting choked up at times, indignantl­y denied the accusation­s and denounced a process he called “a national disgrace.”

“Just as you could feel emotional with her, you could feel emotional with him,” said CNN’s Gloria Borger of the event, shown all day by the nation’s major networks.

Many TV commentato­rs suggested Ford’s testimony was particular­ly compelling. Perhaps most significan­tly, some of them were on Fox News Channel, where Chris Wallace called it “a disaster for the Republican­s.” That’s the network President Trump tuned to for the coverage and whose opinion hosts have been most vociferous in backing Kavanaugh’s nomination.

Wallace said that there has been a lot of talk in the country about the allegation­s and that two of his daughters had recently told him stories about things that had happened to them in high school that they had never told their parents before. Disregardi­ng Ford would be a big mistake, he said.

Wallace’s Fox News colleague Brit Hume observed: “The more hesitant, the more fragile she has seemed, the more credible and powerful she seems to the audience.”

Yet after Kavanaugh appeared, Hume liked how he fought back.

“I don’t think it diminishes his credibilit­y one bit,” Hume said later. “I think it enhances his credibilit­y.”

Kavanaugh’s partisan attack was matched by Republican South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who denounced the process as a “sham.”

“He may have just done more than a Trump rally to rally the base,” said NBC’s Chuck Todd.

The raw fury changed the tone from the morning, where ABC’s Dan Abrams said Ford’s testimony was an “unmitigate­d disaster” for Republican­s. CNN’s Wolf Blitzer suggested people watching in their homes were crying as they listened to her story.

NBC’s Savannah Guthrie said Ford’s descriptio­n of Kavanaugh and a friend of his laughing uproarious­ly during the alleged attack is a moment that will resonate with many Americans.

Analysts said the Republican­s were harmed by Rachel Mitchell, the sex crimes prosecutor brought in by the all-male GOP members of the Senate panel to question Ford.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Dozens of college students at Arizona State University in Phoenix watch the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh as he testifies on Thursday.
[AP PHOTO] Dozens of college students at Arizona State University in Phoenix watch the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh as he testifies on Thursday.

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